Cultural Sensitiveness: Core of the Client Centered Care. The work is to be 4 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

I will pay for the following article Cultural Sensitiveness: Core of the Client Centered Care. The work is to be 4 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. Interestingly, the cultural beliefs and values even influence the health related care and intervention decisions of people from Hispanic ethnic background (Poma, 1987, p.929). Hence, it becomes important for people working in nursing profession to understand the cultural values, traditions and practices related to the aspect of health and medical care during life transition. Implication Of Cultural Traditions on Child Birth Birth of a child is one of the most important, exciting and blissful event in a woman’s life. It is time when the woman and her family are full of hope, happiness and excitement. Hence, the whole family is emotionally involved with the woman who is pregnant, and tries to give her all the comfort and support that she needs. However, what really plays an important role in the developing phases of pregnancy, and the process of child birth, are the culture values, traditions and beliefs that are related to the process of child birth. Different cultures have different values, beliefs and practices associated with child birth. Women see to it that every stage of the pregnancy is influenced by the traditional beliefs and understanding. Hence, it is very important for people working in the nursing profession to understand the beliefs and values of different cultures, as it is the knowledge of traditions and practices that can help them to provide the nursing care and interventions that are in sync with the cultural traditions of women undergoing the child birth process. Also, the faith in the health related traditional practices and methods help women to recover from the pregnancy and restore health easily. In the United States, one of the cultural groups that follow the cultural tradition and practices very sincerely during the life transition is the cultural group of Hispanic background (Poma, 1987, p.929). Hence, it is extremely important for people in nursing profession to know and understand the cultural values of Hispanic people so that Hispanic women can feel ‘at home’, relaxed and safe while being cared by the nurses. Traditional Practices In Hispanic Culture The Hispanic women see medical interventions as disturbance to the normal and natural process of birth (Gallo, 2003, p.79). Women from Hispanic background are very particular about delivering the baby ‘naturally’ (Gallo, 2003, p.79). Study by Gallo (2003) found that cesarean was not a preferred option of Hispanic women as it was considered as an ‘abnormal’ delivery and they felt that it was an artificial, and not a natural way, to give birth to a baby (p.79). Hence, it was not a surprise to find that all the participants in the study had a vaginal delivery and had no complaints about the pain or discomfort felt through it (Gallo, 2003, p.79). This shows that cultural beliefs and religious teachings give lot of strength to Hispanic women experiencing child birth, and help them to bear the physical pain and discomfort by making them believe that it is one of the divine experiences in life. This same spiritual and divine approach towards child birth is not found in women from Western culture.

write an article on Schools Described by Jean Anyon and Jonathon Kozol. It needs to be at least 1750 words.

Hello, I am looking for someone to write an article on Schools Described by Jean Anyon and Jonathon Kozol. It needs to be at least 1750 words. According to her, this is attributable solely to the economic capability of parents of children studying in various schools. The first type enumerated by Anyon is “working-class school” that meets the educational needs of students, whose parents are unskilled and semiskilled employees such as security guards, gas station attendants, and welders, among others. The second category elaborated by her, “the middle-class school” pertains to students whose parents are employed as supervisors, technicians, and other white-collar job profiles. Anyon names the third type of school as an “affluent professional school”, where the occupation of respective parents encompasses the realms of interior design, cardiology, advertising, to cite a few. And finally, the last category is “the executive elite school” where the children hail from the highly affluent capitalist class. Here, the parents are in the topmost position in the topmost companies of the country.&nbsp.

 

writing homework on Experiences of Being Human.

Need help with my writing homework on Experiences of Being Human. Write a 750 word paper answering; &nbsp.The poem is written with a mixed emotion of appreciation of friendship (between man and environment) as well as the nostalgia of needing to have an emotional connection. Mora on her work in Legal Alien that appeared in her poetry collection that was published in 1984 entitled Chants spoke how horrible it felt once this human connection is lost by just being different in a society that is oblivious of diversity. Mora is of Mexican descent and holds American citizenship by law yet not entirely part of the society she is in because of her two worlds, being a Mexican as well as an American. This poem exudes raw emotion as it was articulated from the first-person point of view on how Mora felt the emotional alienation when that emotional connection of which Whitman talked about is lost by just being an immigrant. This became obvious in the last few lines of her poem stating. “Sliding back and forth/between the fringes of both worlds/ by smiling&nbsp./ by masking the discomfort&nbsp./ of being pre-judged&nbsp./Bi-laterally”. pain was best described by using the characterization of the protagonists of the Vietnam War such as the “white vet’s image /floats closer to me, then his pale eyes look through mine” and a woman “trying to erase names: [but] No, she’s brushing a boy’s hair” making it poignantly painful to recall. The Martian Sends a Postcard Home, on the other hand, combined the familiar and the bizarre as the familiar was seen from an alien’s point of view. Here, Craig Raine highlighted the eccentricity of human experience by the characterization of a martian of which it narrates the similarity and difference between an alien and human being and in a way a commentary or critique of how human beings treat human experience. The Model T has used a symbol (the early version of cars made by Ford) that it differs because it is locked from the inside and that there is “a film to watch for anything missed”. This passage may have been written casually but this line is actually loaded with meaning. It is the human experience gone by as it is looked on the film (which is really the rear mirror)” and we are mindless of it because “time is tied to the wrist or kept in a box” which made us all regretful and as he Raine tells “No one is exempt and everyone’s pain has a different smell”. Perhaps one of the best media of how human beings expressed their deeply seated emotion is through poems. The authors Whitman, Mora, Komunyakaa, and Raine may have represented the varying human emotion that ranged from the “joyous leaves”, alienation, pain in recalling and indifference or regret and may have used different symbolisms such as the trees, Vietnam Memorial, Model T car or a legal status but all of them converged in their intent to articulate and explore human emotions.&nbsp.

 

writing homework on Pop Culture vs. Scholarly.

Need help with my writing homework on Pop Culture vs. Scholarly. Write a 1250 word paper answering; Two articles from these magazines entitled The New Dating Rules and Dating Tips from Charles Darwin put a modern, almost scientific outlook on the dating game and communication between individuals in this situation. The dating game is a difficult one that almost everyone will have to play at some point in their lives, so these articles should be giving accurate information to give people the best chance at success and happiness. The overarching theme of the two pop culture articles is that there are some rules that need to be followed to be successful in the dating game, and these are based on scientific study about ‘what men want’. It’s important that, if women feel this information is necessary to get by in life, then the information being given is as accurate as possible. The purpose of this paper is to explore the similarities and differences between these two pop culture articles and scholarly research on the dating game to ascertain whether the information is accurate, and what the consequences might be for readers of these magazines. The first article from Marie Claire is entitled The New Dating Rules. The article is based around a book by Julie Klausner entitled I Don’t Care About Your Band, aimed at giving women reasons to feel good about themselves in the dating game and what they should be expecting from their experiences. Klausner suggests that there is much more to the dating game than the reasons for failure that we’ve all heard before, like calling too much or too little (Klausner, 2010). One of the major rules that Klausner illustrates is that if you are trying to be someone that will impress your love interest, then that person is not right for you. If an individual has to pretend to like a certain film genre in the hopes of impressing someone, then they are projecting a false image of themselves to the other person. This person could fall in love with a false representation of you, something which happens to a certain degree in all types of relationships (Floyd, 2008). This is obviously a negative point, but Klausner focuses more on the fact that if you have to pretend to like something, then you obviously don’t have enough in common to bond over. This may seem like good advice, and it is indeed backed up by the literature. A study by Gonzanga et al (2007) studied two groups of couples, one set in the dating stage and one set having been married for around a year. The results found that similarity in personalities was an important indicator for emotional similarity, which was in turn important in ensuring compatibility between the two individuals. The findings also suggested that when the general personality traits of the two people in a couple were highly congruent, the two individuals were happier in general and their relationships endured for longer periods of time. Evidently, the point that Klausner makes that dating should not involve pretending to be someone that you do not identify with is backed up by the scientific findings. Another one of the dating rules that Klausner suggests is important is that there is generally a good reason for feeling bad in a relationship. Gonzanga et al (2007) found that emotional states are a key predictor of relationship, and therefore it is important to pay attention to these emotions, however transient they may appear. The second article from Elle magazine is entitled Dating Tips from Charles Darwin.